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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The abdominal pressure is a hydrostatic one, which can be measured in the bladder, the rectum and the stomach. In physiologic conditions, the abdominal pressure is variable, with peaks as high as 100 to 200 mmHg at the time of defecation,
cough
. The increase in abdominal pressure elicited by abdominal distension or compression acts directly on the abdominal compartment, indirectly on the thoracic compartment, and modifies the circulation and the ventilation. Venous return is decreased as the inferior vena cava is compressed. The systemic resistances are also increased as the abdominal vessels are compressed. Therefore the circulation is mainly distributed to the superior part of the body. Although the cardiac output is decreased, the usual haemodynamic parameters remain in the normal range: arterial pressure is increased, heart rate is unchanged, central venous pressure is increased, cardiac failure is unusual. The abdominal distension is also responsible for a restrictive respiratory syndrome, mainly due to the ascension of the diaphragm. The compression of the abdominal content explains renal effects and the decreased diuresis. A sustained increase in abdominal pressure occurs in several clinical conditions. During coelioscopy, abdominal pressure is a under control and the cardiovascular effects are minor. Insufflation with CO2 carries the risk of
hypercapnia
, gas embolism and pneumothorax. During abdominal tamponade, anuria is directly related to the level of pressures. At an abdominal pressure over 25 mmHg, anuria is common and decompression becomes essential. The G suit increases arterial pressure either by elevating vascular resistances or increasing blood content in the upper part of the body. Therefore cardiac tolerance can be decreased especially in cardiac patients. The adverse effects of abdominal pressure can also be observed in case of peritoneal dialysis and ascites. The risk of regurgitation associated with an increased abdominal pressure must also be kept in mind. The abdominal pressure plays an important role in anaesthesia as well as in surgery. Therefore its measurement, which is easy, should become a routine.
...
PMID:[Intra-abdominal pressure]. 799 45
We describe the clinical, radiologic, functional, and pulmonary hemodynamic characteristics of a group of 30 nonsmoking patients with a lung disease that may be related to intense, long-standing indoor wood-smoke exposure. The endoscopic and some of the pathologic findings are also presented. Intense and prolonged wood-smoke inhalation may produce a chronic pulmonary disease that is similar in many aspects to other forms of inorganic dust-exposure interstitial lung disease. It affects mostly country women in their 60s, and severe dyspnea and
cough
are the outstanding complaints. The chest roentgenograms show a diffuse, bilateral, reticulonodular pattern, combined with normalized or hyperinflated lungs, as well as indirect signs of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). On the pulmonary function test the patients show a mixed restrictive-obstructive pattern with severe hypoxemia and variable degrees of
hypercapnia
. Endoscopic findings are those of acute and chronic bronchitis and intense anthracotic staining of the airways appears to be quite characteristic. Fibrous and inflammatory focal thickening of the alveolar septa as well as diffuse parenchymal anthracotic deposits are the most prominent pathologic findings, although inflammatory changes of the bronchial epithelium are also present. The patients had severe PAH in which, as in other chronic lung diseases, chronic alveolar hypoxia may play the main pathogenetic role. However, PAH in wood-smoke inhalation-associated lung disease (WSIALD) appears to be more severe than in other forms of interstitial lung disease and tobacco-related COPD. The patients we studied are a selected group and they may represent one end of the spectrum of the WSIALD.
...
PMID:Pulmonary arterial hypertension and cor pulmonale associated with chronic domestic woodsmoke inhalation. 841 64
Data concerning the occurrence of chronic-obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) vary between 11 and 20% due to the underlying definition of COPD. We investigated the frequency of COPD in 202 patients with OSAS. The obstructive pattern was defined by bodyplethysmography (Rt > 0.35 kPa x 1(-1) x s(-1)), flow-volume-curve (MEF50 < 50% pred.), Tiffeneau-index (FEV1/IVC < 70% pred.) and anamnesis (
cough
and/or sputum). Prevalence of COPD in our 202 patients with OSAS was 16.3%. Patients with OSAS and COPD had a higher body-mass-index (BMI), lower PaO2 and spent more time in an oxygen saturation < or = 90% in relation to total recording time (t90). Polysomnographically there was no difference between the two groups with regard to the ventilatory parameters apnea-index (AI) and apnea-hypopnea-index (AHI). As there is a high risk of developing
hypercapnia
, pulmonary arterial hypertension and cor pulmonale in patients with OSAS and COPD there is need for early diagnosis of the combination of both diseases.
...
PMID:[Incidence of chronic obstructive respiratory tract disease in patients with obstructive sleep apnea]. 868 3
An 83-year-old man presented with episodes of right sided retro-orbital pain, visual disturbance, involuntary jerks of his left arm and less frequently his left leg. The symptoms could be triggered by exercise, heat or
cough
. EEG recordings revealed no epileptic discharges. Duplex ultrasonography showed an occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. Blood flow velocity in the right middle cerebral artery was reduced and vasomotor reactivity to
hypercapnia
was absent. Reduction of his antihypertensive medication rendered the patient asymptomatic. The combination of transient visual blurring, retro-orbital pain and contralateral limb shaking can be an unusual manifestation of carotid occlusive disease. In such a case, the symptoms may be managed successfully by the elevation of blood pressure.
...
PMID:Transient visual blurring, retro-orbital pain and repetitive involuntary movements in unilateral carotid artery occlusion. 963 1
Noninvasive long-term ventilation is consensually advocated when daytime
hypercapnia
> 6 kPa at steady state in chronic restrictive pulmonary syndromes. Several mechanisms can cause the occurrence of
hypercapnia
in these diseases. They may involve impairment of lung mechanics or airway function and
cough
, ventilation-perfusion mismatching, blunted central ventilatory drive or respiratory muscle fatigue. These abnormalities may occur while awake or during sleep. From a practical point of view, imperative ventilation, a palliative technique that aims to supply respiratory muscle weakness, and preventive ventilation, aimed at delaying respiratory handicap, should be distinguished between. The latter is offered to patients who do not fulfil any criteria for mechanical ventilation. Otherwise, the underlying disease markedly influences both pathophysiology and outcome. This implies that the available modes of ventilatory support should be assessed in each disease. Several findings have been published about Duchenne's muscular dystrophy. Mechanical ventilation, usually using noninvasive methods, is offered to patients with either
hypercapnia
or a forced vital capacity < 20% of the predicted value. Nevertheless, based on our experience, deterioration of the restrictive syndrome should be followed by a tracheostomy. By contrast, early ventilation, offered to patients free of symptoms and whose forced vital capacity are within 20-50% pred and with normal arterial blood gas levels, achieves no benefit.
...
PMID:Is early noninvasive mechanical ventilation of first choice in stable restrictive patients with chronic respiratory failure? 1021 81
The cuffed oropharyngeal airway (COPA) was compared with the laryngeal mask airway (LMA) with respect to airway quality and respiratory adverse events in 140 spontaneously breathing patients undergoing procedures of duration more than 1 h. Patients were allocated randomly to receive either a COPA (n = 72) or a LMA (n = 68) for airway management during anaesthesia induced with propofol and maintained with sevoflurane, nitrous oxide and oxygen. Groups were similar when comparing the first-time successful insertion rates (COPA: 94.5%, LMA: 95.6%), but airway manipulations (head tilt, chin lift, jaw thrust) were reported more frequently in the COPA group, 27.8% vs. LMA, 4.4%; P = 0.0005. During the post-induction apnoeic period, all patients were ventilated manually and although, mean (SD) leak pressure was lower in the COPA group (18 (4) cm H2O vs. LMA, 22 (3) cm H2O; P < 0.0001), the tidal volumes achieved did not differ in both groups: COPA, 9.5 (4) mL kg-1 vs. LMA, 10.5 (4.5) mL kg-1. The incidences of intra-operative
coughing
, gagging, laryngospasm, oxygen desaturation and
hypercarbia
were similar in both groups. Although both devices are equivalent with respect to the overall respiratory problems during spontaneous breathing anaesthesia of intermediate or prolonged duration, the LMA was associated with fewer airway quality problems, suggesting that it is more efficacious in securing the airway.
...
PMID:Comparative evaluation of the prolonged use of the cuffed oropharyngeal airway and the laryngeal mask airway in spontaneously breathing anaesthetized patients. 1043 64
Complaints of poor sleep are very common in people with chronic respiratory disorders. In patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), poor sleep may be due to many causes, including
cough
, excess mucous production, and frequent arousals from sleep caused by
hypercapnia
, as well as secondary to medications used to manage the lung disease. Patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) also complain of excessive daytime sleepiness and fatigue due to poor-quality sleep, although the mechanism of sleep disruption is somewhat different from that in patients with COPD. Although benzodiazepines are often the drugs of choice for the management of insomnia, caution is suggested with the use of these agents in patients with chronic obstructive respiratory disease due to the reduction in upper airway muscle tone and blunting of the arousal response to
hypercapnia
. However, controlled trials with short-acting benzodiazepine receptor antagonists, including triazolam, zolpidem, and zaleplon, suggest that these agents may be safely used in selected patients who have mild to moderate COPD without daytime
hypercapnia
. Less data are available on the use of these agents for patients with OSA, but a preliminary trial using zaleplon suggests that respiratory function is not adversely affected in patients with mild to moderate OSA. Studies are needed to further define the benefit-risk ratio of the use of benzodiazepine receptor agonists for the management of insomnia in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease.
...
PMID:Perspectives on the management of insomnia in patients with chronic respiratory disorders. 1075 6
A high incidence of unsuccessful attempts and complications has been reported when emergency tracheal intubation (ETI) is performed outside the hospital in severely injured children. The aim of this prospective series was to analyse the incidence and related risk factors of complications of emergency tracheal intubation. The time to complete successful ETI and occurrence of incidents, e.g.
cough
reflex, hypoxia or spasm were related to the experience of the physician performing intubation and the use of drugs to facilitate ETI. The incidence of hypoxia,
hypercarbia
, postintubation complications such as extubation stridor and long-term sequelae were noted. Of the 188 children, 78% were successfully intubated at the site of the accident, 10% upon arrival at a local hospital from where they were secondarily transferred and 12% upon admission to our trauma centre. The most severely injured children were intubated in the field in 98% of cases without failure, nor life-threatening complications related to ETI. The experience of the operator influenced the number of attempts and the time to complete successful intubation. Immediate incidents were noted in 25% of children, e.g.
cough
in 18%. The regimen of drugs, but not level of consciousness, influenced the incidence of immediate incidents; without drugs, more than 67% experienced incidents. Early tracheal intubation and controlled ventilation resulted in adequate ventilation upon arrival (mean PaO2 of 35.8+/-24 kPa, mean PaCO2 of 4.35+/-1 kPa). Long-term complications, including transient stridor upon extubation in 33% of the cases, and laryngeal granuloma or tracheal stenosis, were comparable to those in other series. ETI in shocked patients and pulmonary infection in hospital, but not the technique of ETI, increased the risks of long-term complications. Emergency tracheal intubation can be performed safely in the field, and results in adequate ventilation during transportation of severely injured children, provided that it can be performed by trained physicians using adequate drugs to facilitate intubation.
...
PMID:Complications of emergency tracheal intubation in severely head-injured children. 1079 40
Although ventilatory failure is the most common cause of death in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and measurement of respiratory muscle strength (RMS) has been shown to have prognostic value, no single test of strength can predict the presence of
hypercapnia
reliably. RMS was measured in 81 ALS patients to evaluate the relationship between tests of RMS and the presence of ventilatory failure, defined as a carbon dioxide tension > or = 6 kPa. We studied the predictive value of vital capacity (VC), static inspiratory and expiratory mouth pressures (MIP, MEP), maximal sniff oesophageal (sniff P(oes)), transdiaphragmatic (sniff P(di)) and nasal (SNP) pressure,
cough
gastric (
cough
P(gas)) pressure and transdiaphragmatic pressure after bilateral cervical magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation (CMS P(di)) to identify the risk of ventilatory failure in the whole group and in subgroups of patients with and without significant bulbar involvement. For patients without significant bulbar involvement, sniff P(di) had greatest predictive power [odds ratio (OR) 57] with specificity, sensitivity and positive and negative predictive values (PPV, NPV) of 87, 90, 74 and 95%, respectively Of the less invasive tests, per cent predicted SNP had greater overall predictive power (OR 25, specificity 85%, sensitivity 81%) than per cent predicted VC (9, 89%, 53%) and per cent predicted MIP (6, 83%, 55%). No test had significant predictive power for the presence of
hypercapnia
when used to measure RMS in a subgroup of patients with significant bulbar weakness. Thirty-five patients underwent polysomnography. CMS P(di), sniff P(di) and per cent predicted SNP were significantly correlated with the apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) (P = 0.035, 0.042 and 0.026, respectively). The correlations between AHI and per cent predicted MIP and VC were less strong (both non-significant). In ALS patients without significant bulbar involvement, novel tests of RMS have greater predictive power than conventional tests to predict
hypercapnia
. In particular, the non-invasive SNP is more sensitive than VC and MIP, suggesting that it could usefully be included in tests of respiratory muscle strength in ALS and will be helpful in assessing the risk of ventilatory failure. In patients with significant bulbar involvement, tests of respiratory muscle strength do not predict
hypercapnia
. Sleep-disordered breathing is correlated with RMS and the novel tests of RMS having the strongest relationship with the degree of sleep disturbance.
...
PMID:Respiratory muscle strength and ventilatory failure in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1157 Dec 18
We report a 75-year-old woman with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) suffering from
cough
, sputum, high-grade fever and dyspnea on effort. Her chest radiograph revealed an infiltrative shadow in the right lower lung field and her laboratory data showed marked inflammatory changes. Her arterial blood gas analysis showed marked hypoxemia and
hypercapnia
. After her laboratory data and general condition improved, we performed pulmonary rehabilitation for the patient for about 6 weeks. The program consisted of pursed lip breathing, diaphragmatic breathing, muscle stretch gymnastics, and walking. The 6-minute walking test distance increased from 170 m to 280 m. The minimum SpO2 during the 6-minute walking test increased from 88% to 91%. (O2 3 L/m) After discharge, she continued to receive home care from a visiting nurse specialized in respiratory medicine and 24 hour-monitoring of O2-compliance at home. She has not experienced acute exacerbation or re-hospitalization for 1 year. We conclude that home care service is effective to maintain stable conditions such as state of breathing, SpO2, vital signs, and activities of daily living for elderly COPD outpatients.
...
PMID:[A case of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) followed by pulmonary rehabilition]. 1218 10
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